Answer:
Explanation:
I wasn't sure what the letters the trait was supposed to be so I used S and s.
1. male
2. has the trait
3. recessive
4. Ss
5. ss
6. Ss
your answer is a <em>habitat</em>
Complete question:
In the attached files
Answer:
- Increasing uncontrolled poaching acts as some kind of <em>"selective pressure"</em>.
- Animals that carry the genes to grow tusks are removed from the population, and most of the surviving animals are those that do not have tusk and that carry the gene for tusklessness.
- Tuskless animals get to reproduce more frequently, transmitting the tusklessness gene to their progeny, and hence, increasing its frequency in the population.
Explanation:
Due to technical problems, you will find the complete question, the answer, and the explanation in the attached files.
Is called autotroph organisms that create organic molecules needed for survival from inorganic sources. this is achieved through photosynthesis (which is light energy) or chemosynthesis (which is chemical energy).
And photosynthesis is when autotrophs capture and convert the light energy from the sun into usable chemical energy (which is their food).
i just answered the same question like 20 min ago XD
Answer:
Translation
Explanation:
Translation is the process by which mRNA is decoded and translated to produce a polypeptide sequence, otherwise known as a protein. This method of synthesizing proteins is directed by the mRNA and accomplished with the help of a ribosome, a large complex of ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs) and proteins. In translation, a cell decodes the mRNA’s genetic message and assembles the brand-new polypeptide chain. Transfer RNA, or tRNA, translates the sequence of codons on the mRNA strand. The main function of tRNA is to transfer a free amino acid from the cytoplasm to a ribosome, where it is attached to the growing polypeptide chain. tRNAs continue to add amino acids to the growing end of the polypeptide chain until they reach a stop codon on the mRNA. The ribosome then releases the completed protein into the cell.